April 29th, 2013 10:33 AM

San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker, of France, watches the ball go in after making an acrobatic shot during the second half in Game 4 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Los Angeles Lakers, Sunday, April 28, 2013, in Los Angeles. The Spurs won 103-82. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

LOS ANGELES – Tony Parker led five San Antonio players in double figures Sunday as the Spurs beat the depleted, dispirited Los Angeles Lakers 103-82 to knock them out of the NBA playoffs.

Parker scored 23 points as San Antonio completed a four-game sweep in the best-of-seven Western Conference first-round series- the first time the Lakers had been swept in a first-round series since the playoffs expanded to 16 teams in the 1983-84 season.

“It was just a weird feeling,” Parker admitted after the Spurs posted their fourth straight double-digit victory over the Lakers— who scraped into the playoffs but had to make do without superstar Kobe Bryant, who tore an Achilles tendon in the final week of the regular season.

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“Obviously, I’m happy we won, but it’s just weird,” Parker said of facing a Lakers team that by Sunday was missing not only Bryant but also injured point guard Steve Nash, Steve Blake, Jodie Meeks and veteran Metta World Peace.

To make matters worse, big man Dwight Howard was ejected from the game after receiving a second technical foul shortly after halftime.

He had been whistled for his first technical with 50.3 seconds left in the first quarter for elbowing San Antonio guard Cory Joseph and was slapped with the second for arguing with an official.

He finished with seven points, eight bounds and five turnovers before exiting what may have been his last game as a Laker. Howard becomes a free agent on July 1.

Pau Gasol— who battled knee tendinitis and a foot injury during the season— led the Lakers with 16 points, but Los Angeles never led and never really threatened.

Bryant made an appearance in the courtside seats, hobbling off on crutches as time expired.

“Obviously, it wasn’t a fair fight,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of the lopsided series. “But having said that, they came to play every night… What I was pleased about with our team is that we kept our focus every night. We respected them every night.”

It was an ignominious end to a season in which the acquisition of Howard and Nash swelled the payroll to more than $100 million—a price tag meant to be justified by a return to the top for five-time champion Bryant and his new teammates.

But the new-look Lakers never really caught fire. Their early season struggles saw coach Mike Brown sacked in November. The selection of D’Antoni over former coach and fan favorite Phil Jackson extended the turmoil and once the Lakers began to mesh injuries kept them from building any momentum.

The sweep gives the Spurs plenty of time to rest before a second-round clash with either Denver or Golden State in the second round.

The Warriors took a 2-1 lead in that series into Sunday night’s game on their home court in Oakland.